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Stevie Wonder to release retrospective best of in time for UK tour

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Stevie Wonder is to re-release his career spanning retrospective collection ‘The Definitive Collection’ this week, ahead of his visit to the UK. Wonder will play headline slots at Glastonbury and London's Hyde Park this weekend (June 25-27), and to coincide, his best of ‘The Definitive Collec...

Stevie Wonder is to re-release his career spanning retrospective collection ‘The Definitive Collection’ this week, ahead of his visit to the UK.

Wonder will play headline slots at Glastonbury and London‘s Hyde Park this weekend (June 25-27), and to coincide, his best of ‘The Definitive Collection’ is being re-issued by Motown.

The full tracklisting is as follows:

Disc 1

‘Superstition’

‘Sir Duke’

‘I Wish’

‘Masterblaster (Jammin’)’

‘Isn’t She Lovely’

‘I Just Called To Say I Love You’

‘Ebony & Ivory’

‘As’

‘Never Had A Dream Come True’

‘I Was Made To Love Her’

‘Heaven Help Us All’

‘Overjoyed’

‘Lately’

‘For Your Love’

‘If You Really Love Me’

‘Higher Ground’

‘Do I Do’

‘Living For The City’

‘Part Time Lover’

Disc 2

‘Signed, Sealed, Delivered I’m Yours’ (feat. Blue & Angie Stone)

‘For Once In My Life’

‘Uptight (Everything’s Alright)’

‘We Can Work It Out’

‘Yester-Me, Yester-You, Yesterday’

‘I’m Wondering’

‘My Cherie Amour’

‘You Are The Sunshine Of My Life’

‘I Don’t Know Why (I Love You)’

‘A Place In The Sun’

‘Blowin’ In The Wind’

‘Send One Your Love’

‘Pastime Paradise’

‘I Ain’t Gonna Stand For It’

‘Fingertips (Part 1 & 2)’

‘Boogie On Reggae Woman’

‘You Haven’t Done Nothin”

‘He’s Misstra Know It All’

‘Happy Birthday’

‘Signed, Sealed, Delivered I’m Yours’

Latest music and film news on Uncut.co.uk.

Uncut have teamed up with Sonic Editions to curate a number of limited-edition framed iconic rock photographs, featuring the likes of Pink Floyd, Bob Dylan and The Clash. View the full collection here.

The Best Of 2010 Thus Far: Your Favourites

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I’ve just had a look at all your suggestions on the Best Of 2010 blog from last week, and managed to crunch them all into a chart of sorts. Given there’s been such a wide range of albums mentioned, plenty of them only got one or two votes. But these are the lucky 13 that harvested three votes or more. Interesting – healthy, probably – that seven of them didn’t feature in my original 30. I do have some time, as mentioned before, for Caribou, and while Flying Lotus’ music sometimes makes me feel as if ADD can be infectious, I quite like it in the right mood. The others: not so much. Many thanks, again, for engaging with this. 1 = LCD Soundsystem – This Is Happening 1 = Joanna Newsom – Have One On Me 3 Phosphorescent - Here's To Taking It Easy 4 = Caribou - Swim 6 = The Besnard Lakes - The Besnard Lakes Are The Roaring Night 6 = The Black Keys - Brothers 6 = Flying Lotus - Cosmogramma 4 = Gorillaz - Plastic Beach 6 = Steve Mason – Boys Outside 6 = Spoon - Transference 6 = Sun Araw – On Patrol 6 = Ali Farka Toure & Toumani Diabate – Ali & Toumani 6 = Vampire Weekend - Contra

I’ve just had a look at all your suggestions on the Best Of 2010 blog from last week, and managed to crunch them all into a chart of sorts.

WHATEVER WORKS

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DIRECTED BY Woody Allen STARRING Larry David, Evan Rachel Wood The opening moments are the funniest. Having outlined his gloomy philosophy about humanity, Boris Yellnikov (Larry David) talks directly to camera about his life as a suicidal divorcee who ekes out a living as a very rude children’s ...

DIRECTED BY Woody Allen

STARRING Larry David, Evan Rachel Wood

The opening moments are the funniest. Having outlined his gloomy philosophy about humanity, Boris Yellnikov (Larry David) talks directly to camera about his life as a suicidal divorcee who ekes out a living as a very rude children’s chess teacher.

As he does so, passers by look on, bemused. In a typically improbable plot in which a nubile woman falls for the charms of an ageing, neurotic male (at 73, even Woody Allen realises he can no longer cast himself in this role), lucky Larry’s misanthropic baiting soon becomes tiresome.

If this were Curb Your Enthusiasm, he would be punished, elaborately and hilariously. Here, he is indulged. A too neat, too sweet ending is no antidote to the overall sourness of the film. And while the pairing of Allen and David is tantalising enough, they cancel each other out. Whatever Works is derived from a project Allen sketched out in the ’70s, shelved due to quality concerns. First thought, best thought.

David Stubbs

OASIS – TIME FLIES… 1994-2009

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After the last decade of dope opera, any sane person would be forgiven for breathing a sigh of relief at the news that Oasis have packed it in. Time Flies..., which gathers up all the band’s UK singles, serves to remind us why, before the nonsense set in, we loved them so damn much. And how, after that first eruption of stardust-spattered majesty, they’ve drifted off into loud, defiant semi-irrelevance. Oasis emerged from a Britain made gloomy grey by years of Thatcher and Major, and into a musical world dominated by the twin miseries of jittery trip hop and late-period grunge; their first single, “Supersonic”, was released five days after Kurt Cobain killed himself. Driving a Day-Glo coach and horses through this swamp of paranoia and shoulder-shrugging introspection, the Mancs offered positivity, hedonism and skies as blue as a Man City shirt, all powered by heritage Lennon/McCartney melodies and rolling glam rock riffs. In 23 breakneck months between April 1994 and February 1996 Oasis released two unarguably great albums and 11 singles of luminous brilliance. These latter, from “Supersonic” through to “Don’t Look Back In Anger”, were the equal of any run that The Beatles, the Stones, The Who or The Kinks – the bands against whom Oasis so brashly measured themselves – ever put together. The young folks adored them; “Live Forever” was that sod-everyone-else anthem that every generation needs to gird its loins for the road ahead. Old rockers lapped them up, the band’s respectful updating of The Canon affording them another chance to shake a joyous tail feather. With astonishing rapidity, they soon ruled the pop culture roost; you couldn’t start an era-defining comedy (The Royle Family) or end an epochal drama (Our Friends In The North) without using their music. By 1997 they were as big as they always said they’d be; more amazingly, they’d made music every bit as marvellous as they’d sneeringly promised. The masterplan (get nearly as big as The Beatles by sounding quite a lot like The Beatles) had worked. But, it turned out, the masterplan – or maybe Oasis’ execution of it – had a long-term flaw. The band’s best early songs are about yearning and craving and striving. Once the lads had attained all of which they’d ever dared dream – stardom, adulation, girls, hot and cold running drugs – they never quite, despite all Noel Gallagher’s enduring mastery of tune construction, mustered up the passion and desire that made Definitely Maybe and Morning Glory such magnetic brews. More importantly, their major influence changed. The group’s indebtedness to The Beatles had always been obvious and largely undisguised. Occasionally it reached surreal proportions – they were sued for plagiarism (over “Whatever”) by Neil Innes, who, as the main songwriter for The Rutles, had himself made a tidy living aping the writing style of Macca and John L. After Morning Glory, all that changed. Instead of looking to the Fab Four for inspiration, Oasis were increasingly under the thrall of their own initial output. From the careless mess of the third LP (Be Here Now, tossed off, Noel has admitted, in a ‘fuck it’ cocaine haze), through the remainder of the singles contained here, there’s a diminishing-returns search for heights once effortlessly scaled, for missing keys, for lost chords. As if in recognition of these (inevitable, forgivable) declining standards, the compilers of Time Flies... have been careful to avoid strict chronology. By sandwiching it between “Don’t Look Back In Anger” and “Cigarettes…”, they hope, perhaps, to bring glamour-by-association to the limp “Songbird”. By marbling them through the true classics, they believe, maybe, that we’ll see some of the later, slightly wheezing, efforts in a new, more flattering, glow. And to some extent, this strategy works. What becomes evident is that though some of their newer creations are wan retreads of headier templates, Oasis rarely made bad singles, even if 2007’s “Sunday Morning Call”, is only granted inclusion as a secret track on the second disc. The marathon “Falling Down”, for instance, cut loose from its dreary setting in their final LP, sounds like one last tremendous kick against the dying of the light. If what you’re really after is a Best Of, then the nearest you’ll get is 2006’s Stop The Clocks. That collection, put together by Noel and brutally biased toward the earlier vintage, is a proper monument. Time Flies..., though fun, is no more than a handy place to nab all 27 Oasis’ singles in one unfiltered, undiscerning grab. Danny Kelly

After the last decade of dope opera, any sane person would be forgiven for breathing a sigh of relief at the news that Oasis have packed it in. Time Flies…, which gathers up all the band’s UK singles, serves to remind us why, before the nonsense set in, we loved them so damn much. And how, after that first eruption of stardust-spattered majesty, they’ve drifted off into loud, defiant semi-irrelevance.

Oasis emerged from a Britain made gloomy grey by years of Thatcher and Major, and into a musical world dominated by the twin miseries of jittery trip hop and late-period grunge; their first single, “Supersonic”, was released five days after Kurt Cobain killed himself. Driving a Day-Glo coach and horses through this swamp of paranoia and shoulder-shrugging introspection, the Mancs offered positivity, hedonism and skies as blue as a Man City shirt, all powered by heritage Lennon/McCartney melodies and rolling glam rock riffs.

In 23 breakneck months between April 1994 and February 1996 Oasis released two unarguably great albums and 11 singles of luminous brilliance. These latter, from “Supersonic” through to “Don’t Look Back In Anger”, were the equal of any run that The Beatles, the Stones, The Who or The Kinks – the bands against whom Oasis so brashly measured themselves – ever put together. The young folks adored them; “Live Forever” was that sod-everyone-else anthem that every generation needs to gird its loins for the road ahead. Old rockers lapped them up, the band’s respectful updating of The Canon affording them another chance to shake a joyous tail feather. With astonishing rapidity, they soon ruled the pop culture roost; you couldn’t start an era-defining comedy (The Royle Family) or end an epochal drama (Our Friends In The North) without using their music. By 1997 they were as big as they always said they’d be; more amazingly, they’d made music every bit as marvellous as they’d sneeringly promised.

The masterplan (get nearly as big as The Beatles by sounding quite a lot like The Beatles) had worked. But, it turned out, the masterplan – or maybe Oasis’ execution of it – had a long-term flaw. The band’s best early songs are about yearning and craving and striving. Once the lads had attained all of which they’d ever dared dream – stardom, adulation, girls, hot and cold running drugs – they never quite, despite all Noel Gallagher’s enduring mastery of tune construction, mustered up the passion and desire that made Definitely Maybe and Morning Glory such magnetic brews. More importantly, their major influence changed. The group’s indebtedness to The Beatles had always been obvious and largely undisguised. Occasionally it reached surreal proportions – they were sued for plagiarism (over “Whatever”) by Neil Innes, who, as the main songwriter for The Rutles, had himself made a tidy living aping the writing style of Macca and John L. After Morning Glory, all that changed. Instead of looking to the Fab Four for inspiration, Oasis were increasingly under the thrall of their own initial output. From the careless mess of the third LP (Be Here Now, tossed off, Noel has admitted, in a ‘fuck it’ cocaine haze), through the remainder of the singles contained here, there’s a diminishing-returns search for heights once effortlessly scaled, for missing keys, for lost chords.

As if in recognition of these (inevitable, forgivable) declining standards, the compilers of Time Flies… have been careful to avoid strict chronology. By sandwiching it between “Don’t Look Back In Anger” and “Cigarettes…”, they hope, perhaps, to bring glamour-by-association to the limp “Songbird”. By marbling them through the true classics, they believe, maybe, that we’ll see some of the later, slightly wheezing, efforts in a new, more flattering, glow. And to some extent, this strategy works. What becomes evident is that though some of their newer creations are wan retreads of headier templates, Oasis rarely made bad singles, even if 2007’s “Sunday Morning Call”, is only granted inclusion as a secret track on the second disc. The marathon “Falling Down”, for instance, cut loose from its dreary setting in their final LP, sounds like one last tremendous kick against the dying of the light.

If what you’re really after is a Best Of, then the nearest you’ll get is 2006’s Stop The Clocks. That collection, put together by Noel and brutally biased toward the earlier vintage, is a proper monument. Time Flies…, though fun, is no more than a handy place to nab all 27 Oasis’ singles in one unfiltered, undiscerning grab.

Danny Kelly

STEVE WINWOOD – REVELATIONS, THE VERY BEST OF…

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Once, his pad was very messy and there were whiskers on his chin. Nowadays Steve Winwood is a 62-year-old institution, a collaborative buddy of Christina Aguilera (“Makes Me Wanna Pray”) and an eternal hero to the baby-boomers for his intrepid voyages with Traffic (1967–74). A world-class musician and singer, Winwood became one of pop’s business-suited success stories in the ’80s (“Valerie”, “Higher Love”), when his yearning tenor challenged Robert Palmer and Huey Lewis for Radio 1 airtime, and his videos rivalled A-Ha and Peter Gabriel for hi-tech complexity. And some Traffic purists have yet to forgive him for it. Winwood has always been an unusual combination of grandee and underdog. He can appear a rock establishment figure one minute, a puckish outsider the next. When you think who his contemporaries were – Mick Jagger, Van Morrison, Ray Davies – Winwood is all the more eccentric for being low-key, a man almost virginal in his lack of controversial opinions or personality disorders. He’s often been described as ageless. You could go further, as Keith Richards once did, and call him faceless. He’s sometimes seemed a backroom boy in his own superstar career. Revolutions: The Very Best Of Steve Winwood, a 4CD box set which Winwood himself has compiled, consists of 58 tracks that plot a (mostly) chronological course through the last 45 years. There is a surprise straight away. Winwood has squeezed most of his solo work on to one disc (the third), loading the first two discs (and part of the fourth) with no fewer than 29 selections by Traffic – including four from their 1994 reunion album, Far From Home. Question: is Winwood having a love affair with Traffic, or a fit of insecurity about his recent solo albums? Certainly, About Time (2003) and Nine Lives (2008) were widely acclaimed, the latter almost charting Top 10 in America. It is represented here by just one track, “Dirty City”, an atmospheric mean-street blues with an Eric Clapton guitar solo. It would have been nice to hear more. Revolutions begins in mono, and in Midlands dancehalls, with the sound of a 16-year-old Winwood singing in a voice close to Motown while creating ecstatic energy surges on a Hammond B-3. The Spencer Davis Group’s biggest hits kick us off (“Keep On Running”, “Somebody Help Me”, “Gimme Some Lovin’”, “I’m A Man”). For added value, here is the boy wonder singing a negro prison song about “workin’ on the railroad for a dollar a day” (“This Hammer”). If that sounds implausible, here he is holding down a series of insanely overloaded organ chords (“Waltz For Lumumba”) like Martin Rev in Suicide. Then comes the move to stereo, and to Traffic. Winwood once aptly characterised Traffic as a “ragamuffin groove” band. Full of weightless, cross-pollinating rhythms, their music was a bubbling goulash of jazz, folk, Latin, soul, African percussion and Big Pink spiritual ensemble-rock. They began as four Englishmen in a Berkshire Downs cottage, but along the way they acquired a French-Ukrainian, several Americans, a Ghanaian and a Jamaican. Winwood played keyboards and guitars, and had such stunning mastery of his vocal cords that he could emotionally inhabit a 16th century murder ballad (“John Barleycorn”), a whimsical pop 45 (“Paper Sun”) and a pronouncement of unwieldy surrealism such as “the thing that disturbs you is only the sound of the low spark of high-heeled boys”. In the middle of this Traffic forest we stumble on a three-song interlude by Blind Faith, Winwood’s 1969 supergroup with Clapton and Ginger Baker, which disintegrated after one album. Under-produced but worth listening to, “Can’t Find My Way Home” is Blind Faith at their woody, witchy best. The third disc of Revolutions is the tricky one, and not just because Winwood has crammed 31 years into 74 minutes. From his first solo album, the muso masterclass Steve Winwood (1977), he includes only the African-tinged “Vacant Chair” – a foretaste of “Biko” and Graceland to come – before whisking us straight to his next album. Arc Of A Diver (1980) was Winwood at his most self-sufficient (he played every note) and it retains a metaphorical power – a reaching-for-greatness quality – as well as a feeling of smooth, funky sophistication. Winwood clearly likes it, too, selecting four songs. What a musician! His fretless bass on “Night Train” is a supple feat of pulse and swing; the slo-mo synthesiser scene-setting on “While You See A Chance” is like the sun glinting on the windows of skyscrapers as day breaks. The only slight caveat (or perhaps an enticement) is that Winwood has re-recorded “Spanish Dancer”. The new version is brisker, with touches of flamenco, and is sung with Weller-esque gruffness. As it dons the fashions of the mid-’80s, disc three becomes harder to love. Winwood fell into the perennial jazz fan’s trap – blandness – and some of the synthetic noises that passed for keyboards and drums in those days (“Freedom Overspill”, “Back In The High Life Again”) are frankly ghastly. It’s a relief to encounter the subtle shades of “Different World” (from About Time), an inspired confluence of Donald Fagen, Talk Talk and Four Tet. The fourth disc (which confusingly starts again in the ’60s) features a bit more of About Time, notably Winwood’s cover of Timmy Thomas’ “Why Can’t We Live Together”, audaciously arranged as a cha-cha-cha. Imagine Santana’s “Oye Como Va” with a socio-political message. It’s terrific. As a career retrospective, however, Revolutions proves as elusive as its subject matter. It’s much too Traffic top-heavy to be truly representative, and Winwood ought to have gone for a better balance by choosing two tracks from some Traffic albums rather than five. A word of caution, too, about the remastering: while it definitely gives a lift to Blind Faith, it’s too bass-y for some Traffic tunes, and the haunting ballad “No Time To Live”, particularly, sounds badly distorted. Finally, anyone wanting a more concise Winwood anthology should note that Revolutions is also available as a single CD, with its Traffic quota substantially reduced and nothing from About Time at all. David Cavanagh

Once, his pad was very messy and there were whiskers on his chin. Nowadays Steve Winwood is a 62-year-old institution, a collaborative buddy of Christina Aguilera (“Makes Me Wanna Pray”) and an eternal hero to the baby-boomers for his intrepid voyages with Traffic (1967–74).

A world-class musician and singer, Winwood became one of pop’s business-suited success stories in the ’80s (“Valerie”, “Higher Love”), when his yearning tenor challenged Robert Palmer and Huey Lewis for Radio 1 airtime, and his videos rivalled A-Ha and Peter Gabriel for hi-tech complexity. And some Traffic purists have yet to forgive him for it.

Winwood has always been an unusual combination of grandee and underdog. He can appear a rock establishment figure one minute, a puckish outsider the next. When you think who his contemporaries were – Mick Jagger, Van Morrison, Ray Davies – Winwood is all the more eccentric for being low-key, a man almost virginal in his lack of controversial opinions or personality disorders. He’s often been described as ageless. You could go further, as Keith Richards once did, and call him faceless. He’s sometimes seemed a backroom boy in his own superstar career.

Revolutions: The Very Best Of Steve Winwood, a 4CD box set which Winwood himself has compiled, consists of 58 tracks that plot a (mostly) chronological course through the last 45 years. There is a surprise straight away. Winwood has squeezed most of his solo work on to one disc (the third), loading the first two discs (and part of the fourth) with no fewer than 29 selections by Traffic – including four from their 1994 reunion album, Far From Home. Question: is Winwood having a love affair with Traffic, or a fit of insecurity about his recent solo albums? Certainly, About Time (2003) and Nine Lives (2008) were widely acclaimed, the latter almost charting Top 10 in America. It is represented here by just one track, “Dirty City”, an atmospheric mean-street blues with an Eric Clapton guitar solo. It would have been nice to hear more.

Revolutions begins in mono, and in Midlands dancehalls, with the sound of a 16-year-old Winwood singing in a voice close to Motown while creating ecstatic energy surges on a Hammond B-3. The Spencer Davis Group’s biggest hits kick us off (“Keep On Running”, “Somebody Help Me”, “Gimme Some Lovin’”, “I’m A Man”). For added value, here is the boy wonder singing a negro prison song about “workin’ on the railroad for a dollar a day” (“This Hammer”). If that sounds implausible, here he is holding down a series of insanely overloaded organ chords (“Waltz For Lumumba”) like Martin Rev in Suicide.

Then comes the move to stereo, and to Traffic. Winwood once aptly characterised Traffic as a “ragamuffin groove” band. Full of weightless, cross-pollinating rhythms, their music was a bubbling goulash of jazz, folk, Latin, soul, African percussion and Big Pink spiritual ensemble-rock. They began as four Englishmen in a Berkshire Downs cottage, but along the way they acquired a French-Ukrainian, several Americans, a Ghanaian and a Jamaican. Winwood played keyboards and guitars, and had such stunning mastery of his vocal cords that he could emotionally inhabit a 16th century murder ballad (“John Barleycorn”), a whimsical pop 45 (“Paper Sun”) and a pronouncement of unwieldy surrealism such as “the thing that disturbs you is only the sound of the low spark of high-heeled boys”. In the middle of this Traffic forest we stumble on a three-song interlude by Blind Faith, Winwood’s 1969 supergroup with Clapton and Ginger Baker, which disintegrated after one album. Under-produced but worth listening to, “Can’t Find My Way Home” is Blind Faith at their woody, witchy best.

The third disc of Revolutions is the tricky one, and not just because Winwood has crammed 31 years into 74 minutes. From his first solo album, the muso masterclass Steve Winwood (1977), he includes only the African-tinged “Vacant Chair” – a foretaste of “Biko” and Graceland to come – before whisking us straight to his next album. Arc Of A Diver (1980) was Winwood at his most self-sufficient (he played every note) and it retains a metaphorical power – a reaching-for-greatness quality – as well as a feeling of smooth, funky sophistication. Winwood clearly likes it, too, selecting four songs. What a musician! His fretless bass on “Night Train” is a supple feat of pulse and swing; the slo-mo synthesiser scene-setting on “While You See A Chance” is like the sun glinting on the windows of skyscrapers as day breaks. The only slight caveat (or perhaps an enticement) is that Winwood has re-recorded “Spanish Dancer”. The new version is brisker, with touches of flamenco, and is sung with Weller-esque gruffness.

As it dons the fashions of the mid-’80s, disc three becomes harder to love. Winwood fell into the perennial jazz fan’s trap – blandness – and some of the synthetic noises that passed for keyboards and drums in those days (“Freedom Overspill”, “Back In The High Life Again”) are frankly ghastly. It’s a relief to encounter the subtle shades of “Different World” (from About Time), an inspired confluence of Donald Fagen, Talk Talk and Four Tet. The fourth disc (which confusingly starts again in the ’60s) features a bit more of About Time, notably Winwood’s cover of Timmy Thomas’ “Why Can’t We Live Together”, audaciously arranged as a cha-cha-cha. Imagine Santana’s “Oye Como Va” with a socio-political message. It’s terrific.

As a career retrospective, however, Revolutions proves as elusive as its subject matter. It’s much too Traffic top-heavy to be truly representative, and Winwood ought to have gone for a better balance by choosing two tracks from some Traffic albums rather than five. A word of caution, too, about the remastering: while it definitely gives a lift to Blind Faith, it’s too bass-y for some Traffic tunes, and the haunting ballad “No Time To Live”, particularly, sounds badly distorted.

Finally, anyone wanting a more concise Winwood anthology should note that Revolutions is also available as a single CD, with its Traffic quota substantially reduced and nothing from About Time at all.

David Cavanagh

Arcade Fire announce tracklisting for new album ‘The Suburbs’

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Arcade Fire have announced the tracklisting for new album 'The Suburbs'. The album, which is released on August 3, has the following tracklisting: 'The Suburbs' 'Ready to Start' 'Modern Man' 'Rococo' 'Empty Room' 'City With No Children' 'Half Light I' 'Half Light II (No Celebration)' 'Subu...

Arcade Fire have announced the tracklisting for new album ‘The Suburbs’.

The album, which is released on August 3, has the following tracklisting:

‘The Suburbs’

‘Ready to Start’

‘Modern Man’

‘Rococo’

‘Empty Room’

‘City With No Children’

‘Half Light I’

‘Half Light II (No Celebration)’

‘Suburban War’

‘Month of May’

‘Wasted Hours’

‘Deep Blue’

‘We Used to Wait’

‘Sprawl I (Flatland)’

‘Sprawl II (Mountains Beyond Mountains)’

‘The Suburbs (continued)’

The band also confirmed that they will play a warm-up gig in London to prepare for their headline appearance at the Reading And Leeds Festivals this August.

The venue for that gig is being kept secret at present, but fans are urged to pre-order the album from Store.Universal-Music.co.uk in order to qualify to buy tickets. Once an order has been taken, the buyer will be able to buy from a pre-sale ticket link for the gig, which will take place during the first week of July.

See Store.Universal-Music.co.uk for more information.

Latest music and film news on Uncut.co.uk.

Liam Gallagher to write Oasis film or book?

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Liam Gallagher is planning to turn his memories of old band Oasis into a book or film in the near future. Gallagher recently launched film production company In 1 to make a film about The Beatles' Apple Records, and is now planning a similar venture for Oasis in the near future. "Yep, without a do...

Liam Gallagher is planning to turn his memories of old band Oasis into a book or film in the near future.

Gallagher recently launched film production company In 1 to make a film about The BeatlesApple Records, and is now planning a similar venture for Oasis in the near future.

“Yep, without a doubt. Very soon,” he said in an interview with his clothing company Pretty Green‘s official website about the project, adding that he wants to compile his memories “before I forget them all”.

Latest music and film news on Uncut.co.uk.

Radiohead’s Phil Selway announces UK solo tour

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Radiohead drummer Phil Selway is to promote his new solo album with a UK tour. The drummer releases 'Familial' on August 30 through Bella Union, and he heads out on the road the following month. Selway will play a string of dates supporting Wilco, as well as appearances at Bestival, End Of The Roa...

Radiohead drummer Phil Selway is to promote his new solo album with a UK tour.

The drummer releases ‘Familial’ on August 30 through Bella Union, and he heads out on the road the following month.

Selway will play a string of dates supporting Wilco, as well as appearances at Bestival, End Of The Road and Electric Picnic festivals.

He plays:

Electric Picnic Festival (September 4)

Bestival (11)

End Of The Road Festival (12)

London Royal Festival Hall (with Wilco) (14)

Newcastle Academy (with Wilco) (15)

Glasgow Barrowlands (with Wilco) (16)

Click here to buy tickets for the gigs.

Latest music and film news on Uncut.co.uk.

Beck teams up with Sonic Youth’s Thurston Moore for Record Club project

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Beck has recorded a session with Sonic Youth guitarist Thurston Moore and Chicago's Tortoise for his next Record Club instalment. The ongoing musical project sees various musicians going into the studio with Beck to record a reworked version of an entire album in a day, with nothing rehearsed or ar...

Beck has recorded a session with Sonic Youth guitarist Thurston Moore and Chicago‘s Tortoise for his next Record Club instalment.

The ongoing musical project sees various musicians going into the studio with Beck to record a reworked version of an entire album in a day, with nothing rehearsed or arranged ahead of time.

The album for the latest instalment is yet to be announced, though Tortoise‘s guitarist/bassist Douglas McCombs told TimeOutNY.com that their session saw them play a “broad spectrum of music that was sort of appropriate”.

When completed, the results of the recordings will be posted at Beck.com/RecordClub.

Other acts to have joined Beck previously include Liars, MGMT, Devendra Banhart and members of Wolfmother and Little Joy.

Latest music and film news on Uncut.co.uk.

Goldfrapp man creates soundtrack for Big Chill festival

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Goldfrapp's Will Gregory has made a one-off score to soundtrack this year's Big Chill festival. Festivalgoers will be able to enjoy the inaugural performance of 'Sonic Journey', which is the first of a series of pieces created for and inspired by the festival, which takes place at the Eastnor Castl...

Goldfrapp‘s Will Gregory has made a one-off score to soundtrack this year’s Big Chill festival.

Festivalgoers will be able to enjoy the inaugural performance of ‘Sonic Journey’, which is the first of a series of pieces created for and inspired by the festival, which takes place at the Eastnor Castle site.

Organisers say that the series of works will “capture the essence, spirit and feeling of traveling across a stretch of inspiring landscape.”

You can download the piece, along with a route map from Sonicjourneys.co.uk and retrace Gregory‘s footsteps through sound.

The Big Chill takes place on August 5-8, and features the likes of Massive Attack, MIA and Thom Yorke.

Latest music and film news on Uncut.co.uk.

Damon Albarn signs up for Rough Trade East’s World Cup screening

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Damon Albarn has been confirmed to DJ at London's Rough Trade East as part of the record shop's World Cup programme. Various matches are being shown at the shop, and Albarn's Africa Express has teamed up with it to host performances by artists and music relevant to the teams in the competition. Al...

Damon Albarn has been confirmed to DJ at London‘s Rough Trade East as part of the record shop’s World Cup programme.

Various matches are being shown at the shop, and Albarn‘s Africa Express has teamed up with it to host performances by artists and music relevant to the teams in the competition.

Albarn will DJ on July 7, while others set to appear include Cheikh Lô (Senegal), Muntu Valdo (Cameroon), Afrikan Boy (Nigeria), M3NSA (Ghana), Richy Pitch, Honest Jons, Philipe Cohen-Solal (Gotan Project), Spain’s El Guincho and French duo Jamaica.

The confirmed line-up so far is:

France vs Mexico – Jamaica (DJ Set) (June 17)

England vs Algeria – Honest Jons (DJ set) (18)

Cameroon vs Denmark – Cheik Lo (19)

England vs Slovenia – DJs to be announced (23)

Chile vs Spain – El Guincho (DJ set) (25)

Muntu Valdo (28)

Afrikan Boy (29)

Richy Pitch + M3NSA (July 2)

DJs and acts to be announced (3)

DJs and acts to be announced (6)

Damon Albarn (DJ set) (7)

More artists will be announced in due course. See Roughtrade.com for more information.

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First look – Sofia Coppola’s Somewhere trailer

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In one of those funny little coincidences that come along every now and then, I’ve just finished reading the film pages in the next issue. Among them is a very fine review of Francis Ford Coppola’s latest, Tetro. And now, I’ve just watched the trailer for Somewhere, the forthcoming film from Sofia Coppola. I’m a huge fan of Sofia Coppola’s films to date. Hey, I even liked Marie Antoinette. Personally, I found its drifting moods and woolly narrative pretty beguiling stuff. I could go on, too, about the hazy, impressionistic feel of the scenes at Petit Trianon, the tremendous use of the opening bars of The Cure’s “Plainsong” during the coronation scenes, yadda yadda yadda. Apart from her obvious stylistic skills, I think one of the keys to Coppola’s movies (perhaps with the exception of The Virgin Suicides) is how they correspond to her own experiences. It’s been suggested many times, of course, that there’s something of Coppola herself in Scarlett Johansson’s Charlotte, from Lost In Translation. And particularly how Coppola’s own faltering marriage to director Spike Jonze is reflected in Charlotte’s gradual detachment from her husband in the film. You could even argue that Marie Antoinette might shed some light on Coppola’s own teenage upbringing. After all, you might wonder what it was like growing up in the Coppola household in the Seventies, when her father was at the height of his filmmaking powers, effectively Hollywood royalty? Coppola and Marie were both the youngest daughters in their respective families; Coppola’s film is soundtracked by the Goth-y music of her youth: The Cure, New Order, Siouxsie & The Banshees. [youtube]C9n9hP_LtL8[/youtube] So what to make of Somewhere, then? According to a brief official synopsis from the film company, it’s “the story of Johnny Marco (Stephen Dorff), a bad-boy actor stumbling through a life of excess at the Chateau Marmont Hotel in Hollywood. With an unexpected visit from his 11-year-old daughter (Elle Fanning), Johnny is forced to look at the questions we all must confront.” Admittedly, on paper it sounds pretty grim – you could imagine something like this being made in the Eighties starring Robin Williams, something awful where Life Lessons Are Learned in the most nauseous fashion possible. All the same, the trailer itself looks beautiful; it’s almost wordless, just a wistful piece of indie-electronica from (presumably) Phoenix running over the top. There are echoes here of Lost In Translation – principally, the idea of a tentative relationship between an older man and a young girl, much of it played out in a hotel. But you wonder, too, how much of Coppola’s own childhood is being mined here. To what extent does Johnny Marco represent some aspect of her own father? Of course, we’re going to have to wait until the film comes out for answers, and perhaps more importantly whether the film is any good or not. Astonishingly, Somewhere isn’t out until January next year. Quite why we have to wait so long between the trailer’s release and its arrival in cinemas is beyond me. Unless, of course, she’s got a third act involving a bunch of supervillains, space ships and city-stamping monsters that needs extensive CGI work, seven months seems an awful long time to wait. I'm looking forward to it tremendously, tho. What about you? Is seven months too long to wait for Somewhere? Or did you get bored by Marie Antoinette? Get Uncut on your iPad, laptop or home computer

In one of those funny little coincidences that come along every now and then, I’ve just finished reading the film pages in the next issue. Among them is a very fine review of Francis Ford Coppola’s latest, Tetro. And now, I’ve just watched the trailer for Somewhere, the forthcoming film from Sofia Coppola.

James Blackshaw: “All Is Falling”

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In some circles, it’ll be construed as heretical behaviour: James Blackshaw not touching an acoustic guitar for the duration of an entire album, favouring instead a 12-string electric. For someone who’s been proclaimed, not infrequently here, as some kind of saviour of folk guitar or whatever, it’s something of a shock. Truth be told, though, Blackshaw’s latest album hardly measures up as a rock record. Instead, “All Is Falling” continues on the trajectory established by Blackshaw’s last two albums, “Litany Of Echoes” and “The Glass Bead Game”. Here, again, the virtuoso solo pieces that earmarked Blackshaw as a British relative of the New American Primitive movement are more or less subsumed into formal compositions, where Blackshaw’s guitar takes equal space as the violins and cellos. Still, though, it feels very much like a logical progression from his earliest records like “Sunshrine”: the instrumentation may vary and become richer, but the melodic quirks, the balance between sacred minimalism and romantic expressiveness, remain constant. “All Is Falling” is ostensibly one long piece, divided into eight tracks. “Part One” finds Blackshaw sketching out the themes on overlapping Reichian pianos, before “Part Two” establishes the major thrust of the overall piece; courtly, delicate electric guitar lines threaded through the sort of string arrangements that were showcased at the ensemble show at the Vortex last year. “Cross” from “The Glass Bead Game” is a useful reference point, as perhaps are “Actaeon’s Fall” from the last Six Organs Of Admittance album, “Luminous Night”, and some of Robbie Basho’s “Venus In Cancer”. It’s around “Part Four” and “Part Five”, however, that Blackshaw really starts flying. I sometimes wonder whether he can be a little self-conscious about his own soloing skills, and consequently organises his music in an increasingly self-effacing and controlled way. But when he lets go, as here, it’s quite wonderful. It seems churlish to criticise an album as crafted and satisfying as “All Is Falling”, but I do hope that at some point in what will undoubtedly be an exploratory future, Blackshaw returns to a solo, at least partially improvising model. The pleasures of “All Is Formal”, of course, are more formal. But that’s not to say it’s unrelentingly prettified: by the end of “Part Seven” – another expansive exercise in Glass/Reich-style systems – the violins are wailing like sirens. And the closing “Part Eight” is a distinct departure: a lunar drone piece of shaped guitar feedback, which codifies the devotional intensity of Blackshaw’s music in a new form.

In some circles, it’ll be construed as heretical behaviour: James Blackshaw not touching an acoustic guitar for the duration of an entire album, favouring instead a 12-string electric. For someone who’s been proclaimed, not infrequently here, as some kind of saviour of folk guitar or whatever, it’s something of a shock.

CBGB owners file for bankruptcy

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The company that owns the name of New York's legendary club CBGB has filed for bankruptcy. The former punk venue, which hosted the Ramones, Talking Heads, Patti Smith and Blondie among many others, closed in 2006. Since then, it has lived on in the form of T-shirts and other memorabilia emblazoned with the club's name. However, CBGB Holdings LLC has filed for bankruptcy, reports Billboard. It lists debts in the range of $1 million to $10 million. Latest music and film news on Uncut.co.uk.

The company that owns the name of New York‘s legendary club CBGB has filed for bankruptcy.

The former punk venue, which hosted the Ramones, Talking Heads, Patti Smith and Blondie among many others, closed in 2006. Since then, it has lived on in the form of T-shirts and other memorabilia emblazoned with the club’s name.

However, CBGB Holdings LLC has filed for bankruptcy, reports Billboard. It lists debts in the range of $1 million to $10 million.

Latest music and film news on Uncut.co.uk.

Ozzy Osbourne’s body to become research tool for scientists

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Ozzy Osbourne looks set to undergo tests to see how he is still alive after years of drug and drink abuse. The former Black Sabbath frontman will be one of only a few people in the world to have his full genome analysed by scientists, reports Sky News. US company Knome, who are carrying out the te...

Ozzy Osbourne looks set to undergo tests to see how he is still alive after years of drug and drink abuse.

The former Black Sabbath frontman will be one of only a few people in the world to have his full genome analysed by scientists, reports Sky News.

US company Knome, who are carrying out the test, are hoping to improve their understanding of why some people can live a life of excess and others can not.

The cost of the research will be £27,000, with the results of the tests expected to take three months.

Latest music and film news on Uncut.co.uk.

Interpol announce new album details

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Interpol have announced the release date for their new album. The New York band's new effort is self-titled, and it's released on September 14, reports Pitchfork. At this point a UK date has yet to be confirmed, although it is expected to be a day earlier on September 13. Matador Records, the labe...

Interpol have announced the release date for their new album.

The New York band’s new effort is self-titled, and it’s released on September 14, reports Pitchfork. At this point a UK date has yet to be confirmed, although it is expected to be a day earlier on September 13.

Matador Records, the label that released their first two LPs, 2002’s ‘Turn On The Bright Lights’ and 2004’s ‘Antics’, will release the record, which is also the last to feature bassist Carlos Dengler, who quit the group earlier this year.

The New York group have recently added two new members to their live set-up. On bass and Dave Pajo, while Secret Machines frontman Brandon Curtis will play keyboards and sing backing vocals.

Latest music and film news on Uncut.co.uk.

The 24th Uncut Playlist Of 2010

First up, thanks for the fantastic response to the Best Of 2010: Halftime Report. Please keep your own charts coming, and I’ll try and collate them into some kind of masterlist in the next few days. Moving on, this week’s newish arrivals for your delectation. A handful here I’m not really sold on, if you’re taking notes. 1 The Groundhogs – Thank Christ For The Groundhogs: The Liberty Years 1968-1972 (Liberty) 2 Dylan LeBlanc – Paupers Field (Rough Trade) 3 Fennesz Daniell Buck – Knoxville (Thrill Jockey) 4 Various Artists – Epitaph For A Legend (Charly) 5 Cheikh Lo – Jamm (World Circuit) 6 Ufomammut – Eve (Supernatural Cat) 7 Mavis Staples – You Are Not Alone (Anti-) 8 Roedelius – Lustwandel (Sky/Bureau B) 9 Richard Thompson – Dream Attic (Proper) 10 Grinderman – Grinderman 2 (Mute) 11 Phillip Selway – Familial (Bella Union) 12 Isobel Campbell & Mark Lanegan – Hawk (V2) 13 Caitlin Rose – Own Side Now (Names) 14 REM – Fables Of The Reconstruction: Deluxe Edition (Capitol) 15 Omar Souleyman – Jazeera Nights (Sublime Frequencies) 16 The Jim Jones Revue – Burning Your House Down (Punk Rock Blues)

First up, thanks for the fantastic response to the Best Of 2010: Halftime Report. Please keep your own charts coming, and I’ll try and collate them into some kind of masterlist in the next few days.

Primal Scream’s Bobby Gillespie forms new Nuggets covers band

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Primal Scream frontman Bobby Gillespie has unveiled a one-off collaboration covers band featuring members of the Sex Pistols and The Who. Called Silver Machine, the band have been announced to perform a special covers show at London’s 1234 festival in Shoreditch on July 24. Sex Pistols bassist G...

Primal Scream frontman Bobby Gillespie has unveiled a one-off collaboration covers band featuring members of the Sex Pistols and The Who.

Called Silver Machine, the band have been announced to perform a special covers show at London’s 1234 festival in Shoreditch on July 24.

Sex Pistols bassist Glen Matlock, The Who and former Oasis sticksman Zak Starkey, plus Primal Scream guitarists Andrew Innes and Little Barrie‘s Barrie Cadogan will also take part.

The band are set to perform a collection of their favourite songs by band’s including The Creation, The Flamin’ Groovies, The Chocolate Watch Band, The Troggs and MC5.

“We’re great and we can’t wait,” declared frontman Bobby Gillespie.

Festival director Sean McLusky added: “We did a show at the Whitechapel Gallery with S.C.U.M and a bunch of other artists, Bobby was playing and rocked ‘Wild Thing’ by The Troggs with Jamie Hince from The Kills, so I asked him if he would do more of the same at the festival, so now we have….The Silver Machine.”

Tickets are on sale now.

Latest music and film news on Uncut.co.uk.

Fool’s Gold To Headline Club Uncut

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Fool’s Gold, the eclectic LA collective, will be headlining Club Uncut in August. The date for your diaries is Monday, August 16, and the venue will be Club Uncut’s regular home of The Borderline in London’s West End. Tickets are priced at £8, available as usual from www.seetickets.com. Fool’s Gold’s excellent debut album was released early in 2010, receiving a lot of love for its mix of various African styles with dance music, indie rock and Yiddish lyrics. To read more, check out our Wild Mercury Sound blog here . The next Club Uncut is on June 24, when The Strange Boys play at the Borderline. Latest music and film news on Uncut.co.uk.

Fool’s Gold, the eclectic LA collective, will be headlining Club Uncut in August.

The date for your diaries is Monday, August 16, and the venue will be Club Uncut’s regular home of The Borderline in London’s West End. Tickets are priced at £8, available as usual from www.seetickets.com.

Fool’s Gold’s excellent debut album was released early in 2010, receiving a lot of love for its mix of various African styles with dance music, indie rock and Yiddish lyrics. To read more, check out our Wild Mercury Sound blog here .

The next Club Uncut is on June 24, when The Strange Boys play at the Borderline.

Latest music and film news on Uncut.co.uk.

The Best Of 2010: Halftime Report

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A bit of anal-retentive listmaking today: my favourite 30 albums of the year so far (though I imagine I’ve forgotten one or two, and there’ll be a bunch more good ones that I haven’t heard as yet). I’m pretty sure these were all released between January and June (hence no July things like Endless Boogie and so on). As a bit of a cop-out, I’ve put them in alphabetical order rather than have a stab at rankings. What I need now, of course, are your lists, please. Looking forward to them… 1. Avi Buffalo – Avi Buffalo 2. Blitzen Trapper – Destroyer Of The Void 3. Bonnie ‘Prince’ Billy & The Cairo Gang – The Wonder Show Of The World 4. Bill Callahan – Rough Travel For A Rare Thing 5. Carlton Melton – Pass It On 6. Ali Farka Toure & Toumani Diabate – Ali & Toumani 7. Fool’s Gold – Fool’s Gold 8. Four Tet – There Is Love In You 9. Hiss Golden Messenger – Root Work 10. Hot Chip – One Life Stand 11. LCD Soundsystem – This Is Happening 12. Loscil – Endless Falls 13. Magic Lantern - Platoon 14. Steve Mason – Boys Outside 15. Moon Duo - Escape 16. James Murphy – Greenberg OST 17. Joanna Newsom – Have One On Me 18. Pantha Du Prince – Black Noise 19. Ariel Pink’s Haunted Graffiti – Before Today 20. Rangda – False Flag 21. Jack Rose – Luck In The Valley 22. Sleepy Sun - Fever 23. Sun Araw – On Patrol 24. Tamikrest - Adagh 25. Prins Thomas – Prins Thomas 26. Trembling Bells – Abandoned Love 27. Voice Of The Seven Thunders - Voice Of The Seven Thunders 28. Vampire Weekend - Contra 29. White Fence – White Fence 30. Vibracathedral Orchestra – Joka Baya//The Secret Base/Smoke Song Get Uncut on your iPad, laptop or home computer

A bit of anal-retentive listmaking today: my favourite 30 albums of the year so far (though I imagine I’ve forgotten one or two, and there’ll be a bunch more good ones that I haven’t heard as yet).